Jeannette Rankin Peace Center
Our Mission and Vision:
MISSION: To inspire Western Montana communities toward building a nonviolent, socially just, and environmentally sustainable world.
VISION: The Jeannette Rankin Peace Center imagines a Western Montana defined by peace, justice, and sustainability. Committed to nonviolence, inclusivity, and environmental care, we empower our community to champion equity and cherish diversity, shaping a world where everyone thrives together.
Peace must include the way we each live our lives and the thoughts, actions and speech that supports peace (nonviolence), the way we treat others (social justice) and the way we treat the planet (environmental sustainability).
The Jeannette Rankin Peace Center is a resource to engage the community toward this goal. We focus our work on conversations that matter, connections with others and education. Together we are learning to BE the change!
Our History
In 1986, activists from a number of small peace & justice groups in the Missoula area envisioned a central clearinghouse for peace information and resources, and a meeting place to gather human spirit for peacemaking.
Their hope was to move a concern for peacemaking from the invisible fringes of the community directly into its heart. From a small, loaned room in a church basement, to a rented storefront, to its own home by the Clark Fork River in downtown Missoula, the Jeannette Rankin Peace Center (JRPC) has established itself as a visible and active force for a positive future. Whenever the peace is disturbed – locally, nationally or globally – our phones ring off the hook. Media, local government officials, members of the University community, activists and the general public turn to us as a source of information, wider means of information dissemination, or a place to network with other concerned individuals. With the buildup toward war on Iraq, planning and implementation of multiple rallies occurred here through which thousands of concerned Montanans gathered in the cause of peace.
Learn more about the history peace activism in Missoula.
University of Montana’s Archives and Special Collections has a collection of oral history interviews that were conducted by Dawn Walsh for the Jeannette Rankin Peace Center. The interviewees were former and current members of the Missoula Women for Peace and detail their interest and activities related to peace activism. We have just learned that those interviews (both the audio and transcripts) are now available online at this link https://scholarworks.umt.edu/missoulawomenforpeace_oralhistory/.
JRPC By the Numbers
Number of Years
JRPC was established in 1986.
That makes 2024 our 38th year!
The Fair Trade Store
24 Certified Fair Trade Vendors
10 Local Makers from Montana
Membership
337 Individual Members
Over 50 Organizations & Businesses
Social Media Outreach
Instagram: 2,189 Followers
Facebook: 3,042 Followers
In The Community 2023
7 Indigenous Arts and Education Experiences
13 Programs & Events
Volunteers
31 Regular Monthly Volunteers
665 Volunteer Hours Annually
Over 50 Special Event Volunteers Annually